Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 63, Decatur, Adams County, 16 March 1914 — Page 4

8 THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS 8 r y lj Corrected Every Afternoon

\ EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 18—(Special to Daily Democrat) Receipts, 4. SOO: shipments, 1.900; official to New York yesterday, 190; hogs closing steady. Yorkers, medium and heavy, $9.15© $9.25; pigs, [email protected]; roughs, SB.OO fi>sß.3s; stags, $6.25© $7.25; sheep, 9.400; lower; top lambs, $8.00; cattle, 400; slow, Q. T. BURK. New corn, yellow, per 100 ibs 80c Alsike seed $9.25 Wheat 91c Rye 55c Barley 55c@60c Timothy teed $2.00 Oats 36c.

COAL PRICES. Stove and Egg. hard SB.OO Chestnut, hard $8.25 Pea. hard $7.00 Poca, Egg and Lump $5.25 W. Ash $4.75 V. Splint $4.50 H. Valley $4.25 R. Lion $4.50 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $5.00 Kentucky $4.50 Lurig $4.75 NIBLICK A. CO. Eggs 20c Butter 18c@25c rULLENKAMPS. Eggs 20c Butter 25c : BERLINQB. Indian Runned ducks 8c ' A middle-gaed lady with a 5-y ear-old ■ child would like to have work with a small family, or information call at | Rowand Stivens’on Grant St. 57t3 j

NOTICE My Liquor License expires Saturday April 4th. so now is the time to lay in a supply of “WET” goods for the “DRY” spell. I. A. Kalver

585.00 to ST. LOUIS AND RETURN VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE SATURDAYS, MARCH 7th. AND 2lst Get tickets and information of H. J. THOMPSON, Agent

Old Adanas County Bank Decatur, Indiana. B Capital 1126,000 Surplus . 130,000 C. S. Niblick, President M. Kirsch and John Niblick Vice Presidents E. X. Ehinger, Cashier. Farm loans a Specialty Reflect — RCSOIVC Col lections ~ ' Made MOST OF US ’ Speedily LET ENOUGH DOLLARS GO NEEDLESSLY, Every To Start, And Make Bion'S-’■ A BANK ACCOUNT w 'j& e GROW WEEDLESSLY! Banking Methods That Is, With A Extended Healthy, Steady Growth! PatrunsJ We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits.

Chicks 11c Fowls 11c Ducks 11c Geese ......9c Yirurg turkeys 13c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 13c Old roosters 6c Butter 15c Eggs 20c Above prices pala for poultry free from feed. KALVER MARKETS. Beet hides 11c Calf 13c Tallow 5c Sheep pelts [email protected] Muskrats 5c @ 25c Skunk 25c @52.25 Coon [email protected] ' Possum 10c @ 70c ( Mink 25c @54.00

0 LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. 5 0 Indian Runned ducks 8c 5 Chicks 11c 5 Fowls 11c ) Ducks 11c 5 Geese 9c ) Young turkeys 13c ) Tom turkeys 12c ) Old hen turkeys 13c I Old Roosters 6c > Butter 15c Eggs 20c Above prices paid for poultry free from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. (Prices for week ending February 23): 1914.) i Butter fat Sic , I Butter 30c ; i LOST —Five-dollar bill Saturday be tween Ward Fence office and RunI yon-Engeler Co. store. Bring to this i office. 57t6*

I NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE BY ADMINISTRATRIX. . Tlie undersigned. Lizzie Scheimann, F administratrix of the estate of Fred f erlck Scheimann, deceased, hereby ’ gives notice that, by virtue of an or- . der of the Adams circuit court of Adams County, State of Indiana, she . will, between the hours of 10 o’clock I a. in., and 4 o’clock, p. m„ on Saturday. March 21, 1914, I at the law office of Heller, Sutton .£■ I Heller, over the Old Adams County , Bank, in the . City of Decatur, ' Adams County, Indiana, (and from ’ day to day thereafter. until : sold), offer for sale at private sale all • the interest of the said decedent in , and to the following described real ' estate, situated in Adams county, ! State of Indiana, to-wit: l The west half of the northwest quar- ■ ter of section thirty-three (33) in , township twenty-eight (28) north, of range fourteen (14) east, and the, northwest quarter of th'e southwest , quarter of said section thirty-three(33). township and range aforesaid; and tlie east half of the northeast quar ter of the southeast quarter of section thiry-two (32), township and range aforesaid, containing one hundred for ty (140) acres, more or less. Said sale will be made subject tc the approval of said court, for no; less than the full appraised value o' said real estate, and upon the follow ing terms and conditions: One-third of the purchase money cas! In hand, on day of sale; one-third 1; 1 one year and one-third in two years I deferred payments to bear interest ai i 6 pc-r cent from date of sale, and evi 1 deuced by notes waiving relief, provid | ing for attorney fees and secured b? mortgage on the above described rea i estate; or the purchaser may pay al j cash. Said sale to he made free of liens LIZZIE SCHEIMANN, Administratrix of the estate of Fred erick Scheimann. deceased. Heller, Sutton & Heller, Attor neys. 59tf

* — — o PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sal at his residence, seven miles south east of Decatur, 2 miles cast and 1 mile south of Monroe, near Pleasan Valley church, beginning at 10 o’cjocl a. m„ on Wednesday, March 18, 1914 the folowing personal property, to wit: Nine head of horses, includin, bay gelding. 3 years old, weight 150' lbs. gray horse, coming 3 years old weight 1400. black hor-e, coming years old, weight 1200 lbs.; genera purpose; roan mare colt, coming 2 yrs old. fifteen-sixteenth Belgium, weigh 1250: bay work horse, weighs 1400 bay mare colt, coming 2 years old. bay mare. 12 years old. and 2 man colts, coming yearlings. Nine heat' of cattle, consisting of 2 Durbar cows. 7 years old, fresh April 1; black cow, 7 years old. calf by side; Durhan cow, 7 years old; 2 year-old heifer with calf by side; heifer, coming ” years old. fresh in April; part Jersc cow, coming 2 years old; black heifer with calf by side; 1 spring calf. For ty-eight head of hogs: One Chester White brood sow, 4 full blood DuroJersey brood sows, all will farrow it spring: 43 head of shoats, weighin 50 to 75 lbs. each. Farming Imple ments: McCormick binder, 7 ft. cut Hoosier grain drill. 10 disc, good one: Thomas hay loader, good as new hay tedder. Deering mower. McCor mick mower. John Deere breaking plow, rider, good shape; John Deen corn planter, 2 Monarch corn cultiva tors, one new. never been used: walk ing cultivator. Bell Center disc, sulkj hay rake, roller, potato planter, ma nure spreader. 2-spring-tooth harrows Acme harrow, new 60-tooth spike ha> row. heavy wagon, farm wagon, to; buggy, carrieg 5-tooth cultivator, 2 double shovel plows, trlpple bed wag on box. hay ladder, and beet bed and hog rack combined; 2 sets heavy work harness, corn fodder in field, hay in mow. wind mill, grindstone, grain cradle, dinner bell. 25-barrel galvanixed supply tank and various other articles. Terms or Sale:—All sums of |s.of and under, cash ;over that amount i credit of 9 months will be given, pur chaser giving note with approved se curlty; 4 per cent off for cash. No goods removed until settled for. JASPER WABLE. J. N. Burkhead, Auct. Geo. McManama. Clerk. Everything advertised will sell NOTICE TO BEN HURS. The Ben Hur Aid will meet at the borne of Mrs. Fred Avery on M«Barne. street Thursday evening. Each one b requested to bring a bowl, spoon and cup. SECRETARY. o -■ —» PASTRY SALE. Mrs. Wisehaupt's section of the J’nlted Brethren Aid society will give a pastry sale Saturday at the Penning ton * Llchtle meat market. 59t3 WANTED- Young lady wishes post tlon m stenographer. International business college graduate. Heave word at Democrat office. 67t3 WANTED—Position as farm hand by young, experienced man; married. 23 years old; must have house on farm. Address soon. Jos A. (Tine. Borne, Ind., R. R. 5. or call Jos M Poel, Berne. 6eu

••THE TRAFFIC.” Sensational White Slave Drama Returning to Majestic. Ft. Wayne. ■ ■ The now four act drama, by Rachael Marshall, “The Traffic,” which is to play a return engagement at the Majestic titeater, Fort Wayne. Saturday, matinee and night, is by all dramatic measurements and all stage precedents an astonishing production. To begin witli, "box office policy.” which requires a conventionally happy ending, lias been boldly ignored by both author and producer. Many plays have "taken a hack at old conventions, statued in the square.” But “The Traffic” demolishes the stage fetich of propriety and presents its <tory in frank and startling nudity. It Is a story of white slavery—the commerce In girls against Which tlie Mann act is aimed with more or less success. The piece itself is a well knit, properly balanced and gripping consecutive sequeneb of action. Its iialogue bristles with wit and humor (which is lost sight of in its sad nss) It surges with passion, storms with anger and gloom, with a pathos is tender as heartache. The argument of tlie drama is splendid and inevitable in its onset. Justice to working girls while they are innocent, and not charity and prayers for the lost and hopeless women of the brothels, is the answer to the problem, “How shall we stop the risng tide of white slavery, the traffic in girls, the business of commercialized vice?” What a slap at the snivelling and begloved moralists, with their complex “organizations" and their high-salaried “experts” in the theoretical posturing of “scientific " .escue work for the women they themselves have damned by os racism after society had forced hem from famishing decency to the surfeited “case" of drunken depravity and diseased bodies.

Such a play is “The Traffic,” and we have not seen its like before That the public is ready and eager or such a revelation front the American stage is demonstra‘< d not only I he big audiences which are greeting, his extraordinary drama nightly, bu; by the emphatic applause which tliej »estow upon every telling scene 1 his nakedly convincing play. John C. Livingstone and Nana Bry - int are seen in the two principal roles, tbly supported by the original cast ind production, direct from a four nonths' run at Howard's theater, Chicago. o NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OF RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE. Co the Citizens r.r»d Inhabitants of the Town of Wihiams in Root Township, Adams County. Indiana, anti to the Citizens and Inhabitants of Said Root Township, Adams County. Indiana: Notice is hereby given that 1. th" tnderslgned, John Hey. a male inhablant of the State of Indiana, over the •ge of twenty-one years a person not n the habit of becoming Intoxicated, i fit person to be entrusted w ith th* •ale of intoxicating liquors, a resident lualiiled and legal voter of said Ito 1 Township, and a resident of the Stat * »f Indiana, for more than one year, •nd a resident of the Town of Wiliams, in said Root Township. Adorn > Tounty. Indiana, for more than one ••ear .and a citizen of the United •States, will make application to the Board of Commj:.slcners of Adat. 'ounty, Indiana, at their regular sc tdon In April, 1914. beginning oa to: Sth day of April, 1914. for a renewal of my retail liquor license heretofore ranted me by the Board of Commisfoners of Adams County, Indiana. <:;» he 4th day of A*prli. 1913, to sell inoxlcating liquors, to wit: Npirhuou-c vinous, malt and other intoxicating liquors in leas quantities than n qnaw at a time with the privilege of allow-1 ng the same to be drank on the I premises where sold. The precise location of the promisee wherein ! dt-ire to obtain ttt'h license to sell liquors hi situated as oUowa. to-wit: In the building situated on the north twenty (20) feet, of In-lot Number forty (40) In the original plat of the Town of Williams in Root Town ship. Adams County. Indiana, as the same Is recorded und designated on ‘he recorded rlit of raid town. Said room in which I desire to sell such liquors aforesaid is the front grou.nl floor room in the one and one half story frame building situated on said In lot and on the north 20 feet there of. Hatu room being twenty (ft) feet wide and thirty (30) feet I n length and Is ten (10) feet high to the cell lug. fronting on Perry street In said Town of William* aforesaid That being the Street upon which slid building and room are located. Raid room la go arranged tn the front thereof with glass doors and glass front ao that the whole of said room may be In view from said Perry street aforesaid; and said room baa a front entrant •• and a side entranee nt the hack Os said room: alno an entrance at the back of said room, connecting if with that part of said building used as a dwelling. Raid applicant also desires to keep a cigar stand In said room and sell tobacco and cigars therein. JOHN HEY. fl-13 Applicant. - e>— - - — FOR HALE—Purr White Hussion seed oats. Geo, Zimmerman. IL R. 9. &4>t J 1 BOARDERS WANTED Have mom for one or two l>mirdera. Ladles or gentlemen. Call this office. 61 cod

tet' '' r -"’3SSr^r r ’ HOW $2 GREW, In 1856 the Falls Village Bank was opened In Winsted, Conn. One of the first depositors opened an account with $2, which he never touched, but lias allowed it to remain all these years. He never added to the deposit, but the principal and interest on that $2 deposit today amounts to $21.06. In other words, in 60 years the deposit increased over 1,000 per cent —or over 15 per cent a year. Had that depositor opened his account with $2,000 he would today have $21,000. . Supposing you open an account with us in our Savings Department. You can start it with SI.OO. Every week, or every mont'h add something to it—just small sums you can afford to lay aside. Don’t touch it. Let the interest compound year to year. Why don’t you try it? You will spend the money and have nothing to show for it. By saving it here, you can get it at any time —and if kept until old age it will amount to a fortune. FIRST NATIONAL BANK A Safe Place for Savings Decatur, Indiana. tpr? fl fl I Oho COtWIIGMT ' ’WZj II '*■* ABfcCC® Atiampie us our Baking once tested will convince you beyond all doubts that we produce better cakes, better pies and better pastry than the best average bakery. Every one knows how good our make of bread is; how nice and white, with that delicious, nutty flavor that onlv the best of flour and skillful bakingcan give. Dont fail to give us a trial. Martin’s bread for safest 8. E. Hite grocery, Mrs. Anna McConnell’s North End grocery and at T. A. Hendrick's restaurant. Jacob Martin

Ur. C. V. Connell VETERINARIAN Phone Residencell70 7 STAR GROCERY Lima beans lb. . . . 10c White beans 8c Red Kidney beans lb. 8c German Lentils lb. . 6c Soup Beans lb. . . .6c Jap. Rice lb 8c Fancy Head Rice ib. 10c Dried Peas lb. . . . 5c Barley, lb 6c Dried Sweet Corn . 10c Hominy corn 3 lb®, 10c Will Johns.

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p«===== oe = = ” E=a ‘- COMING! com,ng COMING! a Car load of fine Wisconsin potatoes Offered at 89c per bushel I Will have in Decatur between the 15th and 20th of thia month a car containing ,00 bush- ; 1 els of Early Rose, Burbank. Blisses Triumph | ' and Russet potatoes, just the thing for seed purposes or for eating. . - . xt Thev are guaranteed to be satisfactory, no orders taken except at the car. Watch this j ~ since for the exact date. I ‘ John T. Price K t « «o g===a Eg

’f . 4 A joiA, ’■W c ' GlMeheart will make tins season at Ills old home in Monroe at my j barn, also a mammouth Jack, standing 14 hands high and weighing I.ooo' pounds. Tills Jack is eight years old and sound. I have purchased a fine i Belgian stud from Frisingers & Co. that weighs better than 2.100 pounds, (all and see them before you breed. Service fees to the horses are sls to! insure colt to stand and suck, and' sl2 to the Jack. JAMES W. ANDREWS. Mondoe. Indiana NOTICE OF LETTING OF CONTRACT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Supei intendent of Con-| struction, appointed by the Jay Circuit Court ot Jay County. Indiana, ill the cause of Edward Switzer, exparte, petition for drainage, will on Saturday, March 28. 1914. at 1 o’clock p. tn.. of said day, at ‘.he law office of LaFollette a- McGriff. I*l ■ ithe City of Portland. Indiana, receive bids for the construction of said pro posed drain described in tlie report of the drulhage commissioner therein, and the lowest and best bld will lie accepted for the construction of said work, the same to be done a* cord lag to the plans, spe* ifieations and pro tile now on file in the office of the Clerk of said Court. The right to reject any and all bids is reserved. JOHN WALKER. 13-20 Sept. ot Construction. 11 1 o-

PAINTER ANO PAPER HANGER. I am prepared to do painting and paper hanring. AU work guaranteed. Leave orders at Enterprise drug store or Martin's restaurant. kltl2 JOHN S. CRAMER. WANTED. TO RENT—A house and barn. Call 'phone 513. JUST What you’ve been waiting for-a place to have your clothes repaired, altered or dry 'denned at prices that defy competition. Ladies work a specialty, Expert workmanship, prompt service. DECATUR DRY CLEANERS Ist Door. E. Murray Hotel Phone 695

Homeseekers Excursion f ares To The Southwest VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE H U< T ia £i. March 3r ? 3nd i 7th - A P ril 7 th'and 21st e i'L? h °nk Bon n A^ ent De3atur Information or Address Chas. E.W, A.G.H.A., Toledo, o. $2.00 Decatur to Toledo and Return CLOVER-LEAF-ROUTE bun lay February Ist and 15th and ManMUt 15th and 29th eeH.J. Thompson A?tfor Particulars

“*■. * Ifc Jnl JOHN SPUHLER The Live Stock and General Auctioneer u Can and Will” make your sale a success. Years of experience have taught him how. See him at once for dates as his calander is fast | filling up. Speaks English, German and Swiss. PHONE Residence 531 Decitur, - - - Indiana i ■■■ — . WANTED— Family or piece washings to do. Leave word at office. Will “Icall for and deliver them. 6016 J. I THOMPSON

Representing OXWELD ACETYLINECO M mufacturera Pilot Gas Plants for the Ft rm 214 Columbia st i Fo»t Wayne, In CHMIPUCTH Hniirc 1-30 to 5:00 ■IWIFS 6:30 u. 8:X) Office on second floor, first i door South of Democrat Consultation an i Spina 1 Analysis :ree Lady Attendant I PHONE 650 0. L BURGENER DC.